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Development Of Equipment For Studying Pore Pressure Effects In RockBy W. J. Heck
The need for a better understanding of the effect of fluid pressure on the strength of intact and jointed rock has long been recognized. The behavior of pore fluid pressure was first pointed out by Te
Jan 1, 1972
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New York Paper - Determination of Dissolved Oxygen in Cyanide Solutions (with Discussion)By Max W. Bowen, A. J. Weinig
The important part that dissolved oxygen plays in the cyanide treatment of gold and silver ores is commonly recognized by most metallurgists and mill men. But heretofore there has been no simple metho
Jan 1, 1925
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Influence Of Dissolved Carbide On The Equilibria Of The System Iron-CarbonBy Yap Chu-Phay
IN the previous paper, the writer showed how, on the basis of thermodynamic reasoning, it seems probable that when true equilibrium conditions obtain, carbon exists as Fe3C in the liquid state and as
Jan 1, 1931
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Papers - - Production Engineering and Engineering Research - Effect of Temperature, Pressure and Water-cement Ratio on the SettingBy B. C. Craft, T. J. Johnson, H. L. Kirkpatrick
Petroleum engineers are displaying considerable interest in the problems of cementing oil wells, especially in the Gulf Coast and California areas, where steep temperature gradients are encountered an
Jan 1, 1935
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Distribution of Uranium in Granitic Rocks - Implications of Saturation Limits for Trace Minerals (AIME Vol. 274)By E. C. Simmons
Uranium is an incompatible element with respect to the major rock-forming minerals crystallizing from granitic magma, entering instead trace minerals such as zircon. The relationship between the satur
Jan 1, 1984
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Papers - Notes on the Crystallization of Copper (With Discussion)By Alden B. Grenninger
The time-honored description of the growth of metal crystals to form polycrystalline aggregates is one in which two important steps are considered: (1) nucleation, and (2) dendritic growth, each dendr
Jan 1, 1936
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Objectives Many-FoldThe conservation movement, initiated during the time of Gifford Pinchot and Theodore Roosevelt, has gradually taken hold of the popular imagination of the American people; and today, although it is li
Jan 1, 1950
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Discussion – Comminution as a Chemical Reaction – Mining Engineering, pp. 561, June 1955 – Gaudin, A. M.By K. F. G. Hosking
I read Professor Gaudin's paper with great interest and pleasure because for some time I have held that the chemical aspect of comminution is a subject of considerable importance to the mineral d
Aug 1, 1956
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Discussion - OF Mr. Mathewson's Paper on Relative Elimination of Iron, Sulphur and Arsenic in Bessemerizing Copper-Mattes (see p. 154)Prof. Henry M. Howe, New York, N. Y. (communication to the Secretary*):—The results presented in Mr. Mathewson's paper are of very great interest. Perhaps the most interesting is that shown in Ta
Jan 1, 1908
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Relative Elimination -of Iron; Sulphur, and Arsenic in Bessemerizing Copper-MatteBy E. P. Mathewson
A Discussion of the Paper of E. P. Mathewson, presented at the New York Meeting, April, 1907, and printed in Bi-Monthly Bulletin, No. 13, January, 1907, pp. 7 to 14. PROF. HENRY M. HOWE, New York, N.
Jul 1, 1907
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Cement - An Industry In FluxBy George H. K. Schenck, Peter G. Donald
There is an accelerating acceptance of change by management of cement companies. Diversity of response is noticeable in efforts across the country to reverse the downward trend in profits that brought
Jan 4, 1967
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Evan Evans - Chairman, Coal Division, AIMEBy Evan Evans
HOME-TOWN boy makes good in a i1 big way in the home ' town, expresses concisely the accomplishments of Evan Evans. Born in Coaldale, Pa., in 1895, within sight of the mine head-frames and cleani
Jan 1, 1947
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Wallace E. Prattr Director, A.I.M.EBy AIME AIME
TEXAS not only produces millions of barrels of petroleum daily, but supplies the oil industry with an asset infinitely more valuable than liquld gold. That asset is leadership. The oil industry was bu
Jan 1, 1944
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A Method of Calculating Sinking-Funds, and a Table of Values for Ordinary Periods and Rates of Interest.By Frank Firmstone
Discussion of the paper of John B. Dilworth, presented at the Pittsburg meeting, March, 1910, and printed in Bulletin No. 35, November, 1909, pp. 1041 to 1043. FRANK FIRMSTONE, Easton, Pa. (communica
Apr 1, 1911
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Editorial - Don't Let It DieTHERE have been two important accomplishments of the Truman administration; the Hoover Commission report on inefficiency and waste in government and the report of the Paley Commission on the natural r
Jan 1, 1952
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Photoelasticity-Mining Engineer's New ToolBy AIME AIME
INSTITUTE members attending the Annual Meeting in New York who want to see one of the mining engineers' newest aids, photoelastic stress analysis, are due for an interesting afternoon on Thursday
Jan 1, 1940
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Technical Notes - The Statistical Nature of the Endurance LimitBy R. F. Mehl, J. T. Ransom
For many years the Metals Research Laboratory of Carnegie Institute of Technology has been concerned with the statistical nature of the engineering properties of steel from an experimental viewpoint,
Jan 1, 1950
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Petrology of High Titanium Slags, AbstractBy Charles H. Moore
When lime and magnesia are used as fluxes in the smelting of titaniferous ores fluid, digestible slags low in iron oxide and high in titanium dioxide are produced. The mineral phases present in such s
Jan 1, 1949
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Minerals Beneficiation - Temperature and Humidity in Electrical Separation of Oxide MineralsBy J. H. Anderson, G. A. Parks, B. K. Jindal
Both temperature and humidity are important variables in electrical separations. By independent control of temperature and water vapor pressure, it is shown that charge depends primarily upon relative
Jan 1, 1967
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Atlantic City Paper - Notes Upon Preliminary Tests and Cyanide-Treatment of Silver-Ores in Mexico by the MacArthur-Forrest ProcessBy John F. Allan
This paper does not pretend to advance any facts or improvements not known to many members of the Institute, but is intended merely to give a few practical hints on preliminary tests, and to call atte
Jan 1, 1905